Apple quietly Trims MacBook Air SSDs

Owners of second-gen MacBook Airs have gained much-requested Trim support for the SSDs in their skinny computers thanks to Apple’s latest OS X update.

The Trim command can be issued to compatible solid-state drives to tell them which data are no longer considered in use and so can be erased by the drive itself.

This essentially ensures subsequent writes can be made to blocks the SSD knows to be empty, saving it from having to check and, if necessary, erase the block before writing the new data.

The upshot: faster writes and no performance degradation over time, because blocks marked empty actually are empty.

Apple add the Trim command to the version of Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard code for the latest MacBook Pros, released earlier this year and which have SSD build-to-order options.

Older SSD-equipped Macs, including the SSD-only Airs, lacked Trim support until last week’s release of Mac OS X 10.6.8, Air-owning forum posters at MacRumors have discovered.

Across-the-range Trim support wasn’t previously expected to debut until Mac OS X 10.7 Lion.

Do the Air drives also support Trim?

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There’s a Changing of the Guard Taking Place in the Air Force’s Drone Program

Few years have passed since we first heard about the Predator drones used by the Air Force and other organizations, yet it’s already time to begin waving goodbye to the outrageously expensive aircraft as their more dangerous replacements take over.

The Predator drones haven’t been without troubles—you may recall that the $4.5 million drones’ surveillance feeds could be intercepted and that there were some lawsuits—but they did what they were designed for well and then some. You

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11-inch MacBook Air and 13-inch MacBook Air Hands-on: What’s the Better Value?

They’re a dynamic duo indeed. We just went hands-on with the new 11-inch and 13-inch MacBook Air and wanted to share our first impressions.

At 2.9 pounds, the 13-inch Air is about 1.5 pounds lighter than the MacBook Pro with the same size display and it comes with a higher-resolution 1440 x 900 display.The 11-inch Air weighs just 2.3 pounds and goes with 1366 x 768 pixels. Both models measure from 0.16 to .68 inches, which is very svelte.  You now get a glass trackpad for gestures and you still have a full-size keyboard, but it’s not backlit. Bummer. The

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Apple rolls out two new MacBook Air models

“What would happen if a MacBook and an iPad hooked up?”, Steve Jobs asked his “Back to the Mac” audience today, and answered his own question with the release of two new versions of the MacBook Air, available today starting at $999.

The new duo includes a 13.3-inch, 2.9-pound version, the same display size as the MacBook Air has had since it was introduced in January 2008. But the 13.3-inch model “has a younger brother, too,” Jobs told his audience at the company’s Cupertino campus.

That li’l bro is a new 11.6 inch, 2.3-pound MacBook Air, with a display resolution of 1,336-by-768 pixels; its 13.3-inch big brother’s resolution is 1,440-by-900 pixels.

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Apple announces new MacBook Air and its younger brother

The most exciting part of today’s Apple event was also the one we already knew the most about: the new MacBook Air. The refreshed MacBook Air will come in two sizes, one at 11.6-inches and one at 13.3-inches. They will start at $999 and $1299, respectively.

The refreshed MacBook Air it received a slimmer, more angular design. The system utilizes Apple’s unibody chassis technology, just like the MacBook Pro and it looking like it will be the most attractive MacBook ever.

    The 13.3-inch model will be spec’d similarly to the smaller version, but will get a faster Core 2 Duo processor in addition to the increased storage. The 11

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